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twangle
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twangle
▪ I. twangle, n. (ˈtwæŋg(ə)l) [Cf. twangle v.] A twangling sound; a continuous or repeated resonant sound, usually lighter or thinner than a twang; a jingle.1812 Colman Lady of Wreck ii. xxvi, Loud, on the heath, a twangle rush'd That rung out Supper..From the crack'd bell. 1873 All Year Round 18 Oc...
Oxford English Dictionary
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The Crimea (band)
Members
Davey MacManus - Vocals, guitar, twangle
Joe Udwin - Bass, backing vocals
Andrew Stafford - Keyboards, backing vocals
Owen Hopkin - Drums
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Femi Osofisan
Ibadan: Heinemann, 1991
Twingle-Twangle A-Twynning Tayle. Longman, 1992.
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twangling
ˈtwangling, ppl. a. [f. twangle v. + -ing2.] That twangles.1576 Fleming Panopl. Epist. 239 A tuneable sounde vpon twangling stringes. 1596 Shakes. Tam. Shr. ii. i. 159 While she did call me Rascall, Fidler, And twangling Iacke. 1610 ― Temp. iii. ii. 146 Sometimes a thousand twangling Instruments Wil...
Oxford English Dictionary
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twingle-twangle
twingle-twangle (twɪŋg(ə)lˈtwæŋg(ə)l) [Reduplication of twangle.] A representation of the continuous sounds of a harp or the like. Also as v.1634 Ford Perkin Warbeck iii. ii, Discord of bells pipes and tabours Hodgepodge of Scotch and Irish twingle twangles. 1791 Burns Let. to A. Alison 14 Feb., The...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Warnings/Promises
But with less twangle, more teeth." The staff at E!
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tangle
▪ I. tangle, n.1 (ˈtæŋg(ə)l) [= Norw. taangel, tongul, Færoese tongul, ON. and Icel. þöngull (:— þangulr) ‘the stalk of Laminaria digitata’, app. deriv. of þang bladder-wrack, tang n.3 The etymological history is not clear; tangle cannot have come down from ON., because ON. þ remains in Sc. and Eng....
Oxford English Dictionary
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